MI Assistant Attorney General Fired For Harassing Gay Student

Kris Alingod – AHN News Contributor

Lansing, MI, United States (AHN) – Michigan removed its assistant attorney general, Andrew Shirvell, on Monday for attacking a gay student leader, actions that had prompted condemnation from local officials and the University of Michigan to ban the state official from campus

Shirvell, 30, was fired after a two-day disciplinary hearing on allegations he had harassed and stalked Chris Armstrong, the first openly gay president of the University of Michigan’s student assembly.

The former assistant attorney general had said he was exercising his First Amendment rights during his personal time. But Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox, who previously defended Shirvell’s free speech rights, said Shirvell was removed because he harassed Armstrong and lied to investigators during the hearings.

Cox cited three visits Shirvell made to the student’s home, one at 1:30 am. Shirvell had also followed Armstrong while the student was out with friends in Ann Arbor, and made calls to U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office, where Armstrong was an intern, in an attempt to have the student fired.

Officials also found that Shirvell had posted attacks against the student on the Internet while he was at work. The online posts, however, were not themselves cited for Shirvell’s removal from office.

“To be clear, I refuse to fire anyone for exercising their First Amendment rights, regardless of how popular or unpopular their positions might be,” Cox said in a statement to the Detroit Free Press. “However, Shirvell repeatedly violated office policies, engaged in borderline stalking behavior, and inappropriately used state resources, our investigation showed.”

Shirvell’s lawyer told the Free Press that the decision to remove the assistant attorney general seemed “political.” The former state official still faces the possibility of being unable to practice law in the state as Armstrong has asked the Michigan Attorney Grievance Commission to disbar him.

A University of Michigan graduate, Shirvell began a blog in April called “Chris Armstrong Watch” in which he called the student a “radical homosexual activist, racist, elitist, & liar” and “Satan’s representative on the Student Assembly.”

He warned parents to “beware: the University’s first openly ‘gay’ student body president…. is actively recruiting your sons and daughters to join the homosexual ‘lifestyle.’ “

The blog, which can now only be seen by invited readers, showed photos of Armstrong with swastikas digitally added to his face.

The university banned Shirvell four months later, in early September, after Armstrong requested a personal protection order against the state official for harassing and stalking him. Officials modified the trespass warning last week to allow Shirvell access to the Ann Arbor campus so long as he has no physical or verbal contact with Armstrong.

The Michigan Civil Rights Commission had adopted a resolution urging the removal of Shirvell. The Ann Arbor city council had also condemned Shirvell’s actions, which gained national attention amid growing concerns about the spate of suicides by teens allegedly harassed for their sexual orientation.

One of the victims was a Rutgers University music student, Tyler Clementi, who jumped off the George Washington Bridge after his roommate and another student secretly videotaped him having sex with a man inside his dorm room and streamed the encounter online.

Shirvell’s removal also comes a little over a week after an Arkansas school official was forced to resign because of national uproar over his emotionally charged comments on Facebook mocking gays and the teens who committed suicide.

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Unconditional Surrender – Ulysses S Grant During the Civil War

A failed farmer, businessman, and bill collector. A president roundly criticized as a supporter of corruption. Ulysses S. Grant was not an astute businessman, or even an inspired president; however, as a soldier, he was a success. Grant’s leadership of the U.S. Army during the Civil War made him one of the most celebrated and respected generals that the U.S. has ever produced. His was an unqualified success, one that few would have predicted.

Born in Ohio in 1822, Hiram Ulysses Grant appealed to his U.S. Congressman, Thomas L. Hamer, for admission to West Point at the age of 17. Hamer unwittingly gave Hiram Ulysses Grant the name he would become known for – apparently confused as to the young Grant’s full name, Hamer nominated him as “Ulysses S. Grant,” the S. short for Simpson, Grant’s mother’s maiden name.

Although a soldier by profession, I have never felt any sort of fondness for war, and I have never advocated it, except as a means of peace. Ulysses S. Grant

An unexceptional student, Grant graduated from West Point in 1843, 21st in a class of 39. Although he was a reputable horseman, who would have seemed a natural for the cavalry, Grant was instead appointed regimental quartermaster in the U.S. Army. He served as quartermaster in the Mexican-American War, and was twice brevetted for bravery during the war.

After the war ended in 1848, Grant remained with the Army, stationed at various points West. He’d been made captain by 1854 when he abruptly resigned from the Army. A heavy drinker throughout his life, the rumor that he was found drunk on duty and given the choice of resignation or court martial hounded Grant for years afterward.

Civilian life did not agree with Grant; he failed at several ventures until settling in his father’s Illinois leather goods store in 1860. For Grant, the secession and Civil War that followed could not have come at a better time. When Lincoln called for volunteers after the attack on Fort Sumter, Grant wasted no time recruiting a company and accepting an offer by the Illinois governor to train volunteer regiments.

The art of war is simple enough. Find out where your enemy is. Get at him as soon as you can. Strike him as hard as you can, and keep moving on. Ulysses S. Grant

Grant spent the first year of the war in Missouri, and it wasn’t until he captured two Tennessee Confederate posts, Fort Henry and Fort Donelson, the two first major Union victories of the war, that Grant distinguished himself. Accepting “no terms except unconditional and immediate surrender,” Grant took over 12,000 Confederate prisoners, gaining a promotion to major general from President Lincoln and becoming a national hero in the process.

However, Grant’s newfound glory was not without drawbacks; his commanding general, Henry W. Halleck, took issue both with Grant’s reputed drinking problem and his visit with Halleck’s rival, Don Carlos Buell, and attempted to relieve Grant of the command of what was then known as the Army of West Tennessee. Intervention by Lincoln prevented Grant’s dismissal. Problems with Halleck proved so distressing to Grant that he considered resigning from the Army.

Halleck soon achieved a position in Washington, leaving Grant as Major General of what was now known as the Army of the Tennessee. Grant’s 1863 Vicksburg Campaign would leave no doubt that Halleck’s replacement was more accomplished than Halleck himself; celebrated in the annals of military history, Grant’s strategy to take this important Confederate city was also a daring and unheard of maneuver. Grant took his troops to enemy territory, operating without the customary supply lines, and in short order destroyed the railroad connecting Vicksburg to the rest of the country. Surrounding Confederate General Pemberton’s troops, who now had no supply line themselves, Grant forced Pemberton – and the southwest part of the Confederacy – into submission. This achievement, which coincided with the Union victory at Gettysburg, crippled the Confederacy.

In every battle there comes a time when both sides consider themselves beaten, then he who continues the attack wins. Ulysses S. Grant

It was on to Chattanooga, and a spectacular Union victory, orchestrated by Grant. Lincoln bestowed upon Grant the command of the entire U.S. Army, and Grant paid him back in kind with a strategy that not only won the war, but won Lincoln re-election.

As General-in-Chief, Grant moved his headquarters to Virginia, where he set in motion the plan for coordinated attack against the Confederacy. Grant, along with George Meade and Benjamin Butler, would go up against General Robert E. Lee and the formidable Army of Northern Virginia, while Franz Sigel would take the Shenandoah Valley, Sherman would take Georgia, while other sieges would be set upon railroads in West Virginia and the city of Mobile. Grant’s plan was novel; he was the first general to undertake a unified attack in so many different regions, and the first to propose total war, in which civilians and cities would be attacked as well as armies.

While Sherman, Sigel, and others wrought destruction throughout the South, Grant dug in for a battle ag

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